A method for controlling oxygen precipitation (106) in a silicon crystal (12) grown according to the Czochralski silicon crystal growing technique which includes the steps of forming a cylindrical portion (22) of the silicon crystal (12) from a reservoir of molten silicon (24) according to the Czochralski...http://www.google.com/patents/US5474020?utm_source=gb-gplus-sharePatent US5474020 - Oxygen precipitation control in czochralski-grown silicon cyrstals

Oxygen precipitation control in czochralski-grown silicon cyrstalsUS 5474020 A

Abstract

A method for controlling oxygen precipitation (106) in a silicon crystal (12) grown according to the Czochralski silicon crystal growing technique which includes the steps of forming a cylindrical portion (22) of the silicon crystal (12) from a reservoir of molten silicon (24) according to the Czochralski silicon crystal growing technique. The method includes the steps of terminating the Czochralski silicon crystal growing technique by forming a first tapered portion (101) in silicon crystal (12) at a predetermined rate. A second tapered portion (102) includes a cascaded middle portion (108) that connects to the first tapered portion (101) and that concentrates oxygen precipitation (106) within cascaded middle portion (108) and away from the cylindrical portion (22) of silicon crystal (12). At least a third tapered portion (104) is formed for separating silicon crystal (12) from molten silicon (24).

Images(4)

Claims(7)

What is claimed is:

1. A method for controlling oxygen precipitation in a silicon crystal grown according to the Czochralski silicon growing technique, the method comprising the steps of:

forming a cylindrical portion of the silicon crystal from a reservoir of molten silicon according to the Czochralski silicon crystal growing technique;

terminating the Czochralski silicon crystal growing technique by first forming a first tapered portion in the silicon crystal near its bottom;

forming a second tapered portion of the silicon crystal, the second tapered portion comprising a cascaded middle portion connecting to the first tapered portion, the cascaded middle portion for concentrating oxygen precipitation within itself and away from the cylindrical portion of the silicon crystal; and

forming at least a third tapered portion of the silicon crystal for separating the silicon crystal from the molten silicon.

2. The method of claim 1, wherein said cylindrical portion forming step comprises the step of forming a cylindrical portion to a diameter of approximately 150 millimeters.

3. The method of claim 1, wherein said cylindrical portion forming step comprises the step of forming a cylindrical to a diameter of 200 millimeters.

4. The method of claim 1, wherein said second tapered portion forming step comprises the step of forming the cascaded middle portion by maintaining a constant pull rate on the silicon crystal from the molten silicon for time period.

5. The method of claim 1, wherein said Czochralski silicon crystal growing technique terminating step comprises the step of steadily increasing the temperature in the molten silicon for separating the silicon crystal from the molten silicon.

6. The method of claim 1, wherein said terminating step comprises the step of continuously increasing the silicon crystal's taper weight overtime in forming each of the first tapered portion, the second tapered portion and the third tapered portion.

7. The method of claim 1, further comprising the step of eliminating OISF in the silicon crystal, the method of eliminating OISF comprising the steps:

forming a flared top portion of the silicon crystal to a first diameter; and

inwardly tapering the silicon crystal top portion to produce a cylindrical portion having a second predetermined diameter, said second diameter being smaller than said first diameter for concentrating OISF in the flared portion of the silicon crystal.

Description

TECHNICAL FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates in general to semiconductor device fabrication processes and, more particularly, to a method for controlling oxygen precipitation in silicon crystals grown according to the Czochralski silicon crystal growing technique.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Silicon crystals, as used herein, are cylindrical blocks of pure silicon that semiconductor device manufacturers use to form semiconductor wafers. The manufacturers form the wafers by very carefully and precisely slicing the silicon crystal to produce a flat, mostly circular, thin piece of silicon. A common technique for growing a silicon crystal is known as the Czochralski technique. The Czochralski technique places a silicon seed in a susceptor or heated container filled with molten silicon. The technique is to withdraw the seed from the molten silicon while rotating the seed and susceptor and cooling the silicon that attaches to the seed. The combination of slowly withdrawing the seed, rotating the seed and susceptor, and cooling the silicon that adheres to the seed controllably grows the silicon crystal and permits precise determination of the crystal's diameter and length.

A problem in the Czochralski technique is to control oxygen concentrations in the silicon crystal. A major problem of having oxygen in the silicon crystal is known as oxygen-induced stacking fault or OISF. OISF occurs due to oxygen micro-defects that occur in the crystal. There are some beneficial effects of having a small amount of oxygen in the silicon crystal. For example, a controlled amount of precipitation of small oxygen clusters has the beneficial, metal-gettering effect of forming dislocation angles in the crystal lattice where the molecular oxygen precipitates. There are, however, difficulties in achieving an optional combination of the benefits of oxygen precipitation and freedom from OISF. These difficulties are compounded by other requirements in manufacturing silicon wafers, such as that the silicon be dislocation-free and that the resistivity, resistivity gradients, oxygen concentration, oxygen gradients, and the crystal diameter be within certain ranges. Therefore, deriving the beneficial effects from a small amount of oxygen, however, is quickly overcome by the detrimental effects that OISF causes in the crystal as well as the necessary monitoring and control of process parameters.

The problems that OISF and too much oxygen precipitation cause in the resulting electronic circuit include interruptions in electronic device operation as well as changes in signal properties. Because of these and other problems, generally it is necessary that silicon crystals be free of oxygen micro-defects, including oxygen precipitation. As a result of both OISF and oxygen precipitation, it is often necessary to discard as much as two-thirds of a silicon crystal. That is, in the fabrication of a silicon crystal, OISF may cause a loss of as much as one-third of the top portion of the silicon ingot. Oxygen precipitation defects, in addition, may cause a loss of as much as the bottom third of the silicon crystal. Since the typical preparation time for silicon crystal can be 25 hours, if as much as 50% or more of the silicon crystal must be discarded, or at best recycled, a significant loss in efficiency and productivity occurs using known techniques that employ the existing Czochralski silicon crystal growing techniques.

In silicon crystals grown by the Czochralski technique, for example, the silicon melt temperature and the morphology of the interface between the molten silicon and the growing crystal are important considerations that determine the crystal purity. Although it is well-known that OISF can occur in silicon crystals grown by the Czochralski technique, there is no known method or system that controls OISF in single silicon crystals.

The problem with OISF is that it causes circuit malfunctions in semiconductor wafers formed from silicon crystals that have OISF. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/239,486, pending, by W. Bell, et al, entitled "OISF Control in Czochralski-Grown Silicon Crystals" (hereinafter W. Bell), assigned to Texas Instruments Incorporated and filed on May 6, 1994 addresses the oxygen precipitation problem and is here incorporated by reference.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

There is a need for a method and system that eliminate or control oxygen precipitation in the formation of silicon crystals grown by the Czochralski crystal growing technique.

There is a need for a method to produce a silicon crystal that controls or eliminates the need to crop or cut off significant portions of the resulting silicon crystal due to oxygen precipitation defects.

The method of the present invention includes the steps of controlling or eliminating oxygen precipitation in the desired cylindrical portion of a silicon crystal and thereby eliminates or reduces limitations associated with known methods of using the Czochralski silicon crystal growing technique. The present invention provides a method for controlling the growth of a silicon crystal in such a way as to reduce or eliminate oxygen precipitation defects and the resultant integrated circuit device problems that oxygen precipitation causes.

The present invention, accordingly, forms a cascaded taper bottom portion of the silicon crystal that has a middle portion in which oxygen precipitation concentrates. By concentrating the oxygen precipitation in the middle portion of the tapered bottom portion, oxygen does not appear in the desired cylindrical portion of the silicon crystal. As a result, oxygen precipitation does not adversely affect the resulting silicon wafers from the silicon crystal that the present invention provides.

According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method for producing a silicon crystal having minimal oxygen precipitation defects. The method includes the steps of forming a cylindrical portion of the silicon crystal from a reservoir of molten silicon according to the Czochralski silicon growing technique. In terminating the Czochralski silicon growing technique, the present invention forms a first tapered portion of the silicon crystal at a predetermined rate. Then occurs the step of forming a second tapered portion of the silicon crystal. The second tapered portion includes a cascaded middle portion connecting to the first tapered portion. The cascaded middle portion concentrates oxygen precipitation into the portion and away from the cylindrical portion of the silicon crystal. Then, the method the present invention forms at least a third tapered portion from which the silicon crystal separates from the molten silicon, thereby terminating the Czochralski silicon crystal growing technique with oxygen precipitation away from the cylindrical portion.

A technical advantage of the present invention is that it concentrates oxygen precipitation away from the cylindrical portion of the silicon crystal. There are certain advantages of having a controlled amount of oxygen precipitation in the silicon crystal. The present invention takes advantage of the presence of oxygen precipitation, while at the same avoiding the detrimental affects of oxygen precipitation in the cylindrical portion of the silicon crystal. The result is a significant improvement in the yield of usable silicon within the silicon crystal and greater efficiency in using the Czochralski silicon growing technique.

Another technical advantage of the present invention is that it provides the benefits of oxygen precipitation control with a minimal increase in the number of additional steps and additional processing time for producing the silicon wafer according to the Czochralski silicon crystal growing technique. That is, by only changes in the process time and steps of terminating the Czochralski silicon crystal growing technique, the present invention provides the above stated improvements in the resulting silicon crystal. Moreover, no additional or different equipment is necessary to produce the silicon crystal according to the technique of the present invention.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The invention and its modes of use and advantages are best understood by reference to the following description of illustrative embodiments when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:

FIG. 1 provides a conceptual view of a fixture for growing a silicon crystal according to the Czochralski technique and with which to implement the present embodiment;

FIGS. 2a and 2b provide views of a silicon crystals formed without and with, respectively, the method of present embodiment;

FIGS. 3a, 3b and 3c illustrate and describe characteristics of the phenomenon of oxygen precipitation and its presence at the bottom portion of a silicon crystal grown according to a conventional Czochralski technique;

FIGS. 4a, 4b, and 4c illustrate oxygen precipitation in a silicon crystal formed according to the present embodiment;

A problem in the growth of silicon crystals is the control of oxygen concentration and precipitation to obtain beneficial effects that the presence of oxygen brings while minimizing the detrimental effects of oxygen in the silicon crystal. For example, under certain growth conditions, bands of oxygen micro-defects form that later produce OISF. The present embodiment addresses the problem of oxygen precipitation control and minimization of OISF while maintaining crystal quality in these other factors.

The present embodiment controls the seed and crucible rotation rates and seed lift rate in such a way as to shape the first part of the growing crystal to assume first an oversized diameter and then an inwardly tapered shape. The method keeps the rotation and seed lift rates within certain bounds to control oxygen precipitation. Normal Czochralski silicon crystal growth processes directly taper the sides of the crystal from the smaller diameter seed to the desired diameter of crystal cylindrical portion. Thus, as the seed withdraws from the molten silicon, the silicon crystal forms by continuously increasing in diameter until the crystal reaches the desired cylindrical portion diameter. Thereafter, the conventional Czochralski technique is to maintain the cylindrical portion diameter within a predetermined range to form the silicon crystal. When this is done, however, OISF occurs in the crystal's cylindrical portion. The present embodiment minimizes OISF generation by forming a large diameter top portion and a reverse taper in the top portion part of the silicon crystal.

The conventional Czochralski silicon crystal growing technique is well-known in the prior art. The present embodiment, however, significantly modifies the conventional Czochralski technique to eliminate or minimize both OISF and oxygen precipitation. Inwardly tapered portion 23 cuts off or limits OISF formation in cylindrical portion 22. The result is that OISF does not appear in cylindrical portion 22.

FIGS. 2a and 2b conceptually depict X-ray photography results that illustrate the difference between silicon crystal 32 in FIG. 2a that the conventional Czochralski process forms and silicon crystal 12 in FIG. 2b that the method of the present embodiment forms. Thus, in silicon crystal 32, OISF appears along the cylindrical side 34 in the form of speckled or shaded area 36. In contrast, silicon crystal 12 that the present embodiment forms concentrates OISF within enlarged top portion 20. Inwardly tapered portion 23 prevents OISF from coming into the cylindrical region 22 and improves the purity of the cylindrical portion 22.

There are numerous ways to form the desired silicon crystal 12. One way is described below in conjunction with Table 1. The present embodiment, however, also addresses the problem of controlling oxygen precipitation at the bottom portion of silicon crystal 12. Therefore, before explaining in greater detail how the preferred embodiment avoids OISF, the following description explains the oxygen precipitation features of the present invention.

FIGS. 3a, 3b and 3c illustrate the phenomenon of oxygen precipitation that occurs in bottom portion 40 of silicon crystal 12. In particular, FIG. 3a conceptually shows the results of an X-ray photograph of bottom portion 40 that illustrates the characteristics of oxygen precipitation region 42. Bottom portion 40 begins at bottom corner 41 and has a conical side wall 44 that tapers continuously and at a constantly decreasing rate to endpoint 46.

FIG. 3b plots interstitial oxygen in parts per million atoms (ppma) against distance from the wafer center in millimeters (mm). Line 58 represents general measurements of interstitial oxygen as determined by X-ray photography. The measurements along the horizontal axis 60 (FIG. 3a) of bottom portion 40 show that at wafer center point 66, interstitial oxygen appears in differing amounts. For example, high points 68 and 70 are interspersed with low points 72 and 74. At the horizontal edges of the bottom portion 40, interstitial oxygen peaks 76 and 78 occur.

FIG. 3c shows the results of scanning bottom portion 40 for interstitial oxygen caused by oxygen precipitation. The scan begins at cylindrical portion 22 and proceeds along sloping portion 44 to bottom portion 46. FIG. 3c shows in line 80 that interstitial oxygen levels are low at level 82 until they increase to peak 84, which represents the presence of interstitial oxygen. The horizontal axis of FIG. 3c shows that prior to reaching bottom corner 41 oxygen precipitation occurs. Therefore, in the FIG. 3c measurement, interstitial oxygen exists at approximately 25 millimeters from corner 41 and continues to exist until approximately 5 millimeters from corner 41.

FIG. 4b plots interstitial oxygen in parts per million atoms (ppma) against distance from water center in millimeters (mm). In particular, FIG. 4b shows the flat response of line 122 that indicates no interstitial oxygen in an X-ray cross-section 120 of cylindrical portion 22. Similarly, FIG. 4c shows a vertical scan beginning in cylindrical portion 22 and continuing through bottom portion 100 to illustrate that oxygen precipitation region 106 moves further below bottom corner 101. When compared to peak region 84 of line 80 (FIG. 3c), it is clear that interstitial oxygen has moved down considerably downward in bottom portion 100 of silicon crystal 12 as shown by peak 128 of line 126.

FIGS. 5 and 6 plot parameters associated with the process of forming bottom portion 100 of silicon crystal 12. In FIG. 5, solid line 130 represents calculated diameter in inches of bottom portion 100. Dashed line 132 represents the taper weight in kilograms mass (kgm) of bottom portion 100. As FIG. 5 shows, the present embodiment first begins at a diameter of 150 millimeters (i.e., approximately 6.2 inches) that corresponds to the diameter of cylindrical portion 22. Silicon crystal 12 bottom portion 100 tapers to intermediate diameter 134 that corresponds to intermediate portion 108 of bottom portion 100. Diameter 136 of approximately 2.25 inches corresponds to tip 104. End diameter 138 corresponds to end 110 of bottom portion 100. Note that as diameter line 130 cascades downward, although the taper weight is increasing, it increases at a decreasing weight ending at taper weight 140 of approximately 2.8 kgm.

FIG. 6 explains in greater detail the process of forming bottom portion 100 by plotting pull rate of seed 16 versus process time as line 150. Line 152 plots the temperature set point of the process versus the same process time as appears in line 150. In line 150, the pull rate is constant at a rate of approximately 1.4 inches per hour until point 154. At point 154, time of the pull rate increases to approximately 2.2 inches per hour at point 156. The pull rate then remains constant for a predetermined time until point 158. At point 158, the pull rate increases rapidly until bottom portion 100 separates from molten silicon 24 (FIG. 1). While the pull rate adjustments occur in the present embodiment, the temperature set point increases from approximately 3540° F. to approximately 3605° F.

As FIG. 6 shows, by simultaneously controlling the pull rate and temperature set point, the present embodiment achieves the calculated diameter and taper weight properties of FIG. 5. Increasing the pull rate rapidly at point 154 and then holding the pull rate constant at point 156 until point 158 forms the cascaded middle portion 108 of bottom portion 100. This modification of the conventional Czochralski silicon crystal growth process moves oxygen precipitation region 106 in to middle region 108. This, consequently, eliminates oxygen precipitation from cylindrical region 22 to yield a more pure silicon crystal.

A technical advantage of the present invention is that the combination of eliminating OISF and eliminating oxygen precipitation in the cylindrical portion of silicon crystal 12 eliminates the need to dispose of as much as two-thirds of the silicon single wafer 12. By forming larger diameter top portion 18, the layer of oxygen that causes OISF in the conventional Czochralski technique moves above and outside cylindrical portion 22 of silicon crystal 12. Likewise, forming cascaded bottom portion 100 moves oxygen precipitation away from the cylindrical portion of silicon crystal 12.

Another technical advantage of the present invention is that the cascaded taper of bottom portion 100 uses only slightly more silicon and takes only a minimal amount move time to form than does the uniformly decreasing taper end of conventional Czochralski technology. This, however, is a small expense relative to the benefit of producing significantly more of the usable part of silicon crystal 12.

OPERATION

Having described the method and apparatus for performing the present embodiment, its operation is readily apparent. For completeness, however, the following provides an explanation of one way to practice the invention. Using Czochralski silicon crystal forming reactor 10 as FIG. 1 depicts or some other similar reactor for forming silicon crystal 12, a predetermined amount of bulk silicon is loaded into susceptor 26. The bulk silicon is melted by heater 28 to a predetermined process temperature consistent with known Czochralski crystal growing techniques to form molten silicon 24. Then, heater 24 stabilizes the molten silicon 24 temperature. The next step is to insert seed 16 into molten silicon 24. Seed 16 fuses with a portion of molten silicon 24. Pulling cable 14 raises seed 16 and cooling the adhering silicon takes place at a prescribed rate known in the Czochralski technique. These steps are well known in art and form the basis for the novel concepts of the present invention.

As seed 16 withdraws at a prescribed rate, silicon crystal 12 begins to grow. As single silicon crystal 12 grows, the lift rate increases to control the amount of solidification that occurs. In the present embodiment, solidification increases to the point where top portion 20 grows to a greater diameter than the desired cylindrical portion of silicon crystal 12. Once at the greater diameter, inwardly tapered portion 23 is formed to trap oxygen micro-defects and the associated OISF in top portion 18. The rate of withdrawal of seed device 16 and the associated silicon crystal 12 is then controlled to achieve and maintain a desired degree of uniformity in cylindrical portion 22. However, the length of the cylindrical portion 22 may be computer-controlled so that the formation of bottom portion 100 only occurs after reaching a prescribed length for cylindrical portion 22. After cylindrical portion 22 reaches a desired length, formation of bottom portion 100 occurs according to the procedures that FIGS. 5 and 6 outline. This forces oxygen precipitation into bottom portion 100 and away from the cylindrical portion 22.

The resulting silicon crystal 12, therefore, includes not only flared top portion 18, as FIGS. 1 and 2b show, that locates OISF regions away from cylindrical portion 22, but also bottom portion 100, as FIG. 4a shows, that moves oxygen precipitation region 106 away from cylindrical portion 22. The result is a significantly improved silicon crystal that has pure silicon with neither OISF or oxygen precipitation in cylindrical portion 22.

In order to control both problems of OISF and oxygen precipitation, the present embodiment keeps the seed and crucible rotation rates and seed lift rate within certain bounds, depending on the depth of the heat zone, charge size, and crystal diameter.

The following example even further illustrates the differences in adjustable control parameters for obtaining the above-described technical advantages. Three examples of growing silicon crystal ingots are discussed here. One approach grows a silicon crystal without preventing OISF nucleation centers. Another approach grows silicon crystals in which OISF centers are reduced or eliminated. Yet another example grows in which both OISF and oxygen precipitation control are present.

The foregoing conditions were successfully tested on both 150 mm and 200 mm crystal growth. Similar conditions and bounds will undoubtedly exist for growing silicon crystals having smaller and larger diameter.

In summary, the present invention provides a method for controlling oxygen precipitation 106 in a silicon crystal 12 grown according to the Czochralski silicon crystal growing technique which includes the steps of forming a cylindrical portion 22 of the silicon crystal 12 from a reservoir of molten silicon 24 according to the Czochralski silicon crystal growing technique. The method includes the steps of terminating the Czochralski silicon crystal growing technique by forming a first tapered portion 101 in silicon crystal 12 at a predetermined rate. A second tapered portion 102 includes a cascaded middle portion 108 that connects to the first tapered portion 101 and that concentrates oxygen precipitation 106 within cascaded middle portion 108 and away from the cylindrical portion 22 of silicon crystal 12. At least a third tapered portion 104 is formed for separating silicon crystal 12 from molten silicon 24.

There are any number of alternatives or changes in the method of controlling oxygen precipitation in silicon crystals that may be readily apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art. Such alternatives may not be employed in the device of the present embodiment for any number of reasons, such as costs and performance considerations, size constraints, availability of materials, arbitrary design decisions, and the like. A number of these alternatives have been mentioned above. Thus, the present invention is intended to be limited only by the claims which are meant to cover such obvious alternatives and deviations from the preferred design.